U.S. Supreme Court Opinion in Abortion Pill Case Will Make it More Difficult for Democratic Party to Challenge Minor Party and Independent Candidate Ballot Access in Federal Court

On June 13, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its opinion in Food & Drug Administration v Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, 23-235.  Here is the opinion.  It says that plaintiffs do not have standing to challenge an FDA decision to expand access to certain medications involving abortion.

Although this is not an election law case, it will affect election law, as Professor Derek Muller noted at electionlawblog.  The decision says that just because a group must spend money if some administrative decision is not reversed, that doesn’t mean the challenger to the administration decision has standing.  In Nevada, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is suing in federal court over the state’s determination that vice-presidential candidates must be listed on the independent presidential petition.  A Democratic Party-allied interest group is trying to intervene in the case against Kennedy, on the grounds that if Kennedy gets on the ballot, the interest group will need to spend more money campaigning for President Joe Biden.

But the U.S. Supreme Court said in FDA v AHM, “The medical associations respond that under Hevens Realty Corp. v Coleman, standing exists when an organization diverts its resources in response to a defendant’s actions. That is incorrect.  Indeed, that theory would mean that all the organizations in America would have standing to challenge almost every federal policy that they dislike, provided they spend a single dollar opposing those policies.  Havens does not support such an expansive theory of standing.

Democratic Party groups this year alone have taken legal action to injure the ballot access of various minor party and independent candidates in Arizona, Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, and perhaps some other states.


Comments

U.S. Supreme Court Opinion in Abortion Pill Case Will Make it More Difficult for Democratic Party to Challenge Minor Party and Independent Candidate Ballot Access in Federal Court — 6 Comments

  1. I wonder if this affects taxpayer standing since an agency rulemaking can run afoul of constitutional protections particularly those involving first amendment. SCOTUS also recently rules on cases for plaintiffs that who were experiencing a “chilling effect” on their freedom of expression due to situations where new laws (or rules) even before their passage are claimed to infringe. Probably a right to not be infringed (a negative) versus a positive (we have to spend money there boo hoo). Might be the way arguments are framed, too.

  2. “that theory would mean that all the organizations in America would have standing to challenge almost every federal policy that they dislike”

    Yeah, we wouldn’t want people to think they lived in a free country or that courts were there redress grievance and pursue justice or anything crazy like that…

  3. WHO MADE THE USA AND STATE CONSTS ???

    MERE *PEOPLE* — NOOOO STANDING FOR THEM >>> CURRENT LAWLESS TYRANT LEGS/EXEC/JUDIC MONSTERS

    ESP LACK OF [NATION] STATES *STANDING* VS USA [SUPPOSEDLY WITH LIMITED POWERS]

    BUT ALL SORTS OF USA VS STATES – ESP ELECTION LAW CASES 14-1 AMDT, 15 AMDT, ETC.

  4. This is why we need to expand the court and urgently let President Biden appoint at least 21 new justices in time to have them confirmed and rule on election law and Trump relared cases before the election!

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